 Glioblastoma is a highly aggressive, malignant brain cancer. There's no cure for it. We were blessed because John went for two and a half years before he passed away at the Glioblastoma. His husband's name was John Edward Scarlett, and he was age 70 when he passed away on November 20, 2015. And my name is Peggy Scarlett, and I'm 64. He served in Vietnam in February 1969 through May of 1969. John was diagnosed probably in the early 90s with diabetes. We knew that there had been a link to age and orange, but John was also the one that didn't go to the VA. He was not one to seek compensation. He felt he was doing his job, and of all of that, started Vietnam Veterans with the grade four Glioblastoma. Most are widows, and the struggles that they were facing, having lost their partners, and now they were facing financial struggles because they were being denied benefits, writing about losing their homes or writing about having to go back to work at age 65. So I contacted some of my, here's my background. I'm in cancer data management. If you want to fight something, you've got to have numbers. And I can help you create a database. We're hoping, fighting to get this recognized and to get it onto the presumptive disease list. Families, vets, widows will be able to submit a claim and receive benefits that they deserve. Having served and having this service connected, we're seeing that there is this link. So it's time for the VA to step up and correct this wrong and admit that it seems some responsibility.